Chapter 134: Siwang Mountain Scatters Beans and Becomes a Soldier
Chapter 134: Siwangshan sprinkles beans into soldiers
That night, the forces of the three troops of Yue Hanping's Second Preparatory Division, Liao Lei's 48th Army, and He Zhizhong's 86th Army were ambushed around Siwang Mountain and all entered the positions.
The main position of the second division is between Shimen Mountain and Siwang Town, responsible for the task of blocking the head and attacking the Japanese army on the right. The third division of the 48th Army is from Siwang Town to Zhuomjian and Wufeng Mountain, responsible for the attacking the Japanese army on the left. The two divisions of the 86th Army are responsible for the task of blocking the Japanese army on the left.
At dawn the next day, Major General Imamura advanced in the order of the 47th Infantry Regiment and the 2nd Infantry Artillery Regiment. The 13th Infantry Regiment followed up and was responsible for the guarding tasks of important strongholds and traffic lines on the Guangji Line in Huangmei.
At around 9 o'clock, the Imamura detachment advanced to Shimen Mountain. The Japanese soldiers who were marching suddenly heard a few "boom" guns. The shells fell into the marching queue. More than a dozen Japanese soldiers were blown to pieces, and more than a dozen were lying in pools of blood. Major General Imamura, who had rich practical experience, heard the sound of howitzers. "The Chinese people attacked! It seemed that they were the main force of China, and there were howitzers." The major general said to himself. The chief of staff was small and looked for water everywhere. The water source was occupied by **. Those who were not suitable for occupation were poisoned in the water source and could not be drunk at all.
Imamura had no choice but to ask for help from the Navy Aviation Army, requesting the airdrop of Tamsui and ammunition, and requesting the air force to support the ground troops to break through. An hour later, the Japanese plane flew over Siwang Mountain. When the Japanese pilot looked in the sky, he took a breath of air. The mountainous land within a radius of less than 20 miles was full of **, and the important hills in the middle were also **.
There are hills around, and the roads that can march wind at the foot of the mountain. This terrain is very unfavorable for air strikes. The aircraft dare not lower the altitude too much and can only throw bombs at safe heights. The bombs drift with the airflow. Many bombs were thrown on the hills without posing a threat to the magnitude. The ammunition dropped by the airshui drifted to the magnitude position, which was cheaper. The Japanese soldiers stared at the floating parachutes and saw that most of them floated to the magnitude position. The Japanese cursed: "Baga! Pilots should be killed, and they all threw them to the Chinese people."
Dear book friends:
Chapter completed!